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John J  
#41 Posted : 15 March 2012 13:05:45(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
John J

JohnMurray wrote:
Just because a person, or persons, have a legal ability to obtain redress for pain, injury and loss does not make it a cultural event. Claiming for the above is a right in a civilised society. Claiming when no injury or illness was caused is, commonly, called "criminal fraud". You are all in danger of throwing the baby out with the bathwater. Not surprising really, since if you cannot halt injuries you can at least hide them by forbidding people from being able to obtain com pensation for same. Let me see: Does not the main-player in Health and Safety in the UK say that the majority of industrial accidents/injuries are "preventable" ? So the industry view is that if it cannot prevent the accidents/injuries/deaths, at least it can prevent people receiving any recompense from them ? Shall i hold the edge of the carpet up to make the sweeping easier ?
John, you missed an important point - Not all accidents are as a result of the EMPLOYERS actions.
SP900308  
#42 Posted : 15 March 2012 13:17:06(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
SP900308

John J, yes, most of the remainder are a result of the 'lack' of Employers actions!
johnmurray  
#43 Posted : 15 March 2012 14:54:15(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
johnmurray

I read the original post. I noted that the intent was to: "substantiate the public/employer/employee perception that there is such a thing" How about: " to substantiate the public/employer/employee perception that there is not such a thing"about Personally, prior to throwing the baby and the bathwater into the drain, I would look at the amount of false or maybe-false claims before deciding. Except that the intent is to deprive people, injured and/or ill people, of their ability to seek legal advice and assistance to obtain some financial redress, and not to seek the truth. So, you'll pardon my abruptness if I just assume that the idea is to stop insurers having to pay compensation no matter what ? After all, any paid IS paid by the insurers, unless the company solves its own problem (which would have to be with the knowledge of said insurers....read your policies) I would also like to see other measures, such as employers/companies with poor safety records having to pay substantially higher premiums and not be subsidised by other companies with much better H&S.
John J  
#44 Posted : 15 March 2012 15:41:32(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
John J

SP900308 wrote:
John J, yes, most of the remainder are a result of the 'lack' of Employers actions!
Lets not split hairs. The no Win no Fee adverts imply, and in some cases state, that all accident victims are due compensation. There is no accountability for individuals putting in spurious claims. I have absolutely no issue whatsoever with an individual putting a claim in if they have been imjured by an employers action (or inaction). Sometimes, however, people need to accept that they are responsible for their own actions and need to accept responsibility for the same. Not all employers are 'Dickensian' in their outlook but a few posts on here seem to believe that.
Victor Meldrew  
#45 Posted : 16 March 2012 09:42:20(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Victor Meldrew

Agree John J - If an employee has been injured/wronged or otherwise & is due compensation then I'll stand shoulder to shoulder with him/her to try & obtain justice. However, I firmly believe that it is only when everyone comes to accept that 'they' are largely responsible themselves for their own safety that attitudes & behaviours will change - I ask you all to think about your own personal worst accident/incident that has resulted in 'hurt/harm', forgetting Sport Injuries & RTCs as you could have been hit by someone else - could you have done something to prevent/minimise the accident occurring or the consequences? Usually the answer is yes....... & you’ll probably find, usually at little cost.
Wood28983  
#46 Posted : 16 March 2012 09:58:35(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Wood28983

http://www.telegraph.co....nd-in-100000-payout.html I think this demonstrates that we still have a compensation culture. It has been deemed necessary to tell a 44 year old senior employee who works with risk that jumping 5 feet off a wall is not a good idea. We need to move towards people being responsible for their own actions as well as employers having responsibilities
Victor Meldrew  
#47 Posted : 16 March 2012 10:21:18(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Victor Meldrew

Poacher turned gamekeeper?
NigelB  
#48 Posted : 16 March 2012 19:35:33(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
NigelB

Ok – it is Friday after all. Decimomal – with regard to Employer Liability insurance covering personal injury there is no ‘compensation culture.’ That is: the number of annual claims – yes claims!! – is going down and has been for some time. This trend has been in existence for the last ten years. So – taking into account those of you kindly providing anecdotal evidence to the contrary: 1 According to the HSE statistics for 2010/11, 1.2 million people were suffering from work related illness; 171 workers were killed at work; 115,000 injuries were reported under RIDDOR – the Labour Force Survey put the figure at 200,000 reportable injuries and around 12,000 people died from occupational cancers and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). Let’s forget about the up to 60% under reporting and stick with these figures. We are looking at around 1.4 million people suffering an occupationally related condition in one year. Now ….. 2 If we consider the main HSE reports on the causes of accidents, starting with ‘Managing Safety’ in 1981 to now, overall the HSE estimate that around 80% of accidents can be ‘attributed to a failure in managerial control’. If I make the assumption that employers are not likely to be any better at occupational health controls over substances they cannot see – for example – than safety hazards they can see, then the 80% average can be applied to instances of occupational ill-health. Thus …. 3 In a year we could expect to see around 1,120,000 potentially legitimate claims. However when the actual number of claims is considered we see around 1 in 10 claims being made, according to the TUC. I make the ratio only 1 in 12 people who could claim, actually do claim. That’s make a claim, not succeed in a settlement. In among the reasons that people with genuine claims give for not making a claim is that they are frightened of the employer taking ‘detrimental’ action against them if they do. ie 91% of potentially legitimate claims are not made. I repeat 91% of potentially legitimate claims are not made. So Decimomal there is no ‘compensation culture’ in relation to EL. Ah yes but …… 4 Insurance companies settle claims when they should fight them. OK. I have been given to understand that in order for a civil claim to succeed at least the following two criteria must be met: the injured party must show that the employer was negligent to them ie failed in a duty of care and show that their injury was directly related to their work. They have to prove at least both these points. My understanding is that breach of health and safety Acts or Regulations [criminal law] provides persuasive evidence that the duty of care employers have to workers has also been breached. Hence let me put a scenario …… 5 A ‘no win, no fee’ solicitor submits a claim for an ‘allegedly’ injured worker, throws in shedloads of alleged breaches of H&S law and says ‘pay up or else’. The employer being knowledgeable about what EL insurance is for, immediately sends all correspondence to the insurance company. The insurance company – as part of its request for more information – asks for the ‘suitable and sufficient’ risk assessment. The employer obligingly sends an obviously ‘unsuitable and insufficient’ document that is being laughably passed off as a ‘proper’ risk assessment. The insurance company then asks for the reporting procedure documentation and the accident reporting and recording system and associated documentation. At this point the insurance assessor takes a view that should they fight the case, they will lose. No Nigel you miss the point. It is the time consuming paperwork chase that is the real cause of the problem. Hmmm …… 6 Let me think. The employee has a legal duty to co-operate with the employer. This accident comes as a ‘complete surprise’ to the company. Surely such claims highlight a weakness in the accident reporting and recording system? If a fraudulent claim is being made is this not an example of ‘gross industrial misconduct’? Of course should any evidence exist. You know. Evidence. So that when people accuse solicitors or workers of being liars, fraudsters etc they back accusations up with their evidence. Is fraud not a police matter? However I digress …… 7 On the 18th July 2007 the Government National Audit Office published Coal Health Compensation Schemes. In it they summarized the costs associated with a scheme set up to deal with the claims from COPD and Vibration White Finger following the Court’s decision that the Coal Board were negligent and loads of coal miners suffered ill-health as a result. It was estimated that there would be around 173,500 claims related to COPD: in fact there were 591,000 ooopps a little underestimate there! It was also estimated that there would be around 45,000 claims for VWF: in reality there were 169,000 - whoa bit of an underestimate there again!! In this instance there was loads of publicity of the scheme and ex coal mining areas were particularly targeted. The moral of the argument – when you go looking, loads of legitimate claims can be found. Oh yes …. 8 The main firms of solicitors made loads of money from processing claims. I assume the medical experts who ensured that claimants – ie those coughing their lungs out from the effects of black dust, for example - were not just putting it on, got some fees for their work. Indeed the administration costs were £2.3 billion. The compensation was anticipated to be around £4.1 billion. And people complain because solicitors advertise!! As some posters have previously implied – better keep the workers in ignorance rather than them finding out what their rights are. Or as the Daily Mail – with help from the Prime Minister - might put it …… 9 Down down with workers’ rights – they are destroying the UK economy; strangling the UK spirit of enterprise; causing riots; imitating monsters etc etc. Here’s an innovative idea – if workers submit a claim make them pay a fee just for the privilege of exercising their rights. Oh here’s another one. In the unlikely event that they actually submit a claim and win it, make them pay their solicitor’s fees out of their compensation! You know it makes sense!! 10 So Decimomal, if you – or indeed anyone else has made it to this point - there is no ‘compensation culture’ in relation to EL insurance in the UK. There is, of course, an issue about legal fees. More significantly the vast majority of those who have legitimate claims don’t make them (91% don’t). Oh yeah – there’s a significant issue associated with numerous employers who fail to comply with minimum legal requirements that leaves their insurance companies devoid of a sustainable defence in the face of a civil liability claim. But let’s not talk about that now. Cheers. Nigel
johnmurray  
#49 Posted : 17 March 2012 06:46:54(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
johnmurray

A very long reply complete with information NigelB. But: Where does it: "substantiate the public/employer/employee perception that there is such a thing" Which is, after all, what the original poster wanted.
RayRapp  
#50 Posted : 17 March 2012 09:04:26(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
RayRapp

This thread has certainly developed since I last posted. The review of the civil claim process undertaken by Lord Woolf, hence known as the Woolf Reforms, was designed to ensure a faster and cheaper system for civil redress resulting from an act of negligence. However, the Civil Procedure Rules (CPR) introduced in 1996 have unwittingly opened the flood gates for all manner of insidious practices by claims management companies, including TV and radio advertising as well as unsolicited texts, phone calls and emails. These practices have encouraged spurious claims which often the insurance companies are not willing to challenge because of the ridiculous costs involved. Indeed, as has been highlighted in a previous post, insurance companies have bizarrely contributed by passing on details of vehicle accident victims to these claims management companies and allegedly other organisations like the police! With regards to accidents at work, the employers' liability insurance, which is compulsory, was designed as a social utility in order to ensure those injured at work had a means of redress. It is in effect a no-blame system although in reality if the employee was at fault a sum from the award can be deducted by the court for contributory negligence. As a rule those that are injured can only claim for loss of earnings or future earnings and therefore ensuring the process is not penal or encourages unrealistic claims. Those who are genuinely injured at work or as a result of negligence must be able to seek redress. It is a shame that what Lord Woolf intended has been turned on its head by unscrupulous practices by so-called lawyers and others who should know better.
johnmurray  
#51 Posted : 17 March 2012 11:48:33(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
johnmurray

I tend to assume, with the experience of age, that what a politician says is not what they mean. So when they say they intend to "put an end to the compensation culture" I assume, probably correctly, that what they intend is to stop people claiming redress whether they are entitled to it...or not. I note that the preferred route is to limit success fees. IE: to take the fees off the compensation awarded. So the solicitors/legal-companies still get paid. But less is paid-out in total. Company/insurer win, injured lose. Solicitors OK Injured No-K. And solicitors are overrepresented in the parliamentary system. How strange. Everyone who is no-one wins, injured lose.
Victor Meldrew  
#52 Posted : 18 March 2012 16:30:25(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Victor Meldrew

Well decimomal..... there you have it :-)
Canopener  
#53 Posted : 18 March 2012 20:29:15(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Canopener

Victor, indeed! :-) I for one don’t really know what ‘compensation culture’ really means. Do people make claims? Yes. Are they on the increase? I don’t know. Is there any correlation between the number of claims and accident/injury rates? Again, I don’t know. Are all claims ‘legitimate’? I suggest not. Are some ‘speculative’? I suggest so. Are some fraudulent? Again, I suggest so. Are those that are successful, ‘won’ on the basis of proving negligence, rather than the defendant being unable to prove otherwise? I think most of us know the answer to that one! Do many/most insurers settle many small claims regardless of liability, merely on a cost benefit basis? I believe so. Do I receive both texts and phone calls about me making a claim for an accident that as far as I am aware, I haven’t had? Oh yes! OMG! I’m starting to sound as cynical as someone else!!
NigelB  
#54 Posted : 19 March 2012 10:39:22(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
NigelB

John at #49 I was responding to 'For example is it or is it not a myth ....' when I made the rather long point that it is a myth when the number of claims is considered as the measure. In relation to perception there quite clearly is a problem because the Daily Mail has told us there is one. So it must be true. In Lord Young's report there was a summary of stakeholders views from those who had taken part. His report states: 'There was an overriding opinion that the health and safety agenda had been hijacked by the tabloid press, whose reports often contributed to misinterpretation and misunderstandings by regularly exaggerating and ridiculing instances which in reality have little or nothing at all to do with health and safety. This has not only contributed to the current low standing of health and safety in the eyes of the general public, but has also led employers and event organisers to take an approach centred on eliminating all risks, rather than employing a common sense, proportionate methodology.' Lord Young recommended nothing to deal with this real - not perceived - problem. While I have no doubt spurious claims are made it is a puzzle as to how law abiding employers cannot defend themselves in such cases. Cheers. Nigel
johnmurray  
#55 Posted : 19 March 2012 14:48:32(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
johnmurray

Employers do not have to defend themselves. It is the insurer that handles the action. The premium will not rise excessively, if at all, for a single small claim. Most "reports" have revealed there is no need for much in the way of concern. Unfortunately the reports did not live up to the ideals behind their commissioning, they were expected, and one expects required, to provide hard proof that most claims were fraudulent. The government has several problems to solve. The main one is how to reduce claims without reducing solicitors income (IMHO) Bearing in mind their need for a job when their political "career" is over........
KevMac  
#56 Posted : 20 March 2012 09:52:30(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
KevMac

RayRapp wrote:
This thread has certainly developed since I last posted. The review of the civil claim process undertaken by Lord Woolf, hence known as the Woolf Reforms, was designed to ensure a faster and cheaper system for civil redress resulting from an act of negligence. However, the Civil Procedure Rules (CPR) introduced in 1996 have unwittingly opened the flood gates for all manner of insidious practices by claims management companies, including TV and radio advertising as well as unsolicited texts, phone calls and emails. These practices have encouraged spurious claims which often the insurance companies are not willing to challenge because of the ridiculous costs involved. Indeed, as has been highlighted in a previous post, insurance companies have bizarrely contributed by passing on details of vehicle accident victims to these claims management companies and allegedly other organisations like the police! With regards to accidents at work, the employers' liability insurance, which is compulsory, was designed as a social utility in order to ensure those injured at work had a means of redress. It is in effect a no-blame system although in reality if the employee was at fault a sum from the award can be deducted by the court for contributory negligence. As a rule those that are injured can only claim for loss of earnings or future earnings and therefore ensuring the process is not penal or encourages unrealistic claims. Those who are genuinely injured at work or as a result of negligence must be able to seek redress. It is a shame that what Lord Woolf intended has been turned on its head by unscrupulous practices by so-called lawyers and others who should know better.
Thanks, Ray, for separating out the two issues being conflated: general accidents e.g. to the public in a shop where an employer can usually be found, and accidents involving employees being injured. It seems that if this division isn't made, the subject becomes overly confusing and emotive. The 'public' and 'employees' have different influences and motivations e.g. it's a brave (or badly injured) employee who takes a claim, whereas the public claimants don't have the same pressure. We've all seen crazy claims by people who seem to seek blame for whatever normal life throws at them, my view is that there are many parties out there involved and as was said by a DWP man at IOSH 2012, we shouldn't have to take it all on our shoulders. I wonder if solicitors have similar online debates?
Phil Grace  
#57 Posted : 20 March 2012 12:43:35(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Phil Grace

John Murray wrote: Employers do not have to defend themselves. It is the insurer that handles the action. That's true up to a point but any defence of a claim is based on what happened at the employer's premises. Defences are not "magiced" out of thin air. The responsibility for employee safety rests with the employer. Thus the defence of a claim is based on matters such as: Supply of safe plant and equipment Provision of a safe place of work Ensuring trained and competent fellow employees AND the odd piece of statutory law (!). Only the employer can provide information on such matters Phil
CliveLowery  
#58 Posted : 21 March 2012 18:56:32(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
CliveLowery

As well as being a H & S Pro, I am also a Parish Councillor and a claim was passed to me this morning. Obviously can't go in to much detail but the gist of it is: Our Village handyman has cut all the hedges from around the outside edge of our Recreation Ground Public Open Space, the offcuts were all neatly piled up in several piles, ready for shredding and then spreading around the base of the hedges. Mr A was walking his dog on our recreation ground, when he became distracted from observing his dog by the ringing of his mobile phone. Whilst on the phone, his dog picks up a stick as dogs are prone to do. Unfortunately this was not the usual very brittle type stick usually found but a much more rugged type of stick that got stuck in the dogs mouth. Mr A could not extract the stick as his dog was, in his word very upset, so off he goes to the vet, gets a bill for £50.80 which he has this morning submitted for payment by the Parish Council. Allegedly the dog was on a lead all the time. In answer to the question - No its not a myth, the culture is there all right!
BuzzLightyear  
#59 Posted : 22 March 2012 10:35:20(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
BuzzLightyear

quote=decimomal]I have been asked to sit on a 'question time' type panel on the subject of the compensation culture and would welcome views on the subject. For example, is it or is it not a myth and is there anything to substantiate the public/employer/employee perception that there is such a thing? Ta
Very interesting responses. Based on the information on this thread, sounds to me like we have a compensation culture with regard to public making claims for injuries but not for employees making claims - based on NigelB's interesting conclusions about the 91% who don't make claims. I think you really need to separate these two issues out. (Public compared to employees). Otherwise you might be inadvertently encouraging people to make the same confused destructive and irresponsible sweeping attacks on all types of H&S culture that Cameron makes.
chris42  
#60 Posted : 22 March 2012 12:49:13(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
chris42

Just to throw the proverbial cat amongst the pigeons and to keep this interesting thread going. From your initial question and response in post 7 they have presupposed that your stance is that people should not make a claim, if they have suffered an injury. ie you will automatically have an opposing view to that of a solicitor. I would have thought that both parties would have the same view, that when there has been a real injury, then making a claim would be appropriate. So is the question correct? Should it be “Is there an increase (actual or perceived) in people making fraudulent claims or claims of an extremely trivial nature”. You of course then end up with a debate of where the line should be drawn regarding what is or is not trivial.
Pete Lithgo  
#61 Posted : 22 March 2012 14:24:40(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Pete Lithgo

I believe we do live in claim culture environment, however this is mainly with the public with no win no pay claim culture, however employee’s is a different ball game and we have mixture depending on the company and the employees, people will always take advantage if their will gain with out lost to themselves. I believe we need to support people who have claims however we don’t seem to have the right balance at the moment. If we don't allow employees/public to claim safety job would be even more difficult to enforce. The story below is not directly on the same issue, however I think it may be why people think negatively about safety and how managers are still get away with taking risks etc. Safety officer/Management and employees have miss understanding on doing risk assessment and working safely and just putting umbrellas, then ignoring bigger and more dangerous issues because the job needs to be completed etc. Speaking to my friend the other day, who works for small company who do refurnishing and he was telling me some of things, safety officer get them to do and it takes to long process etc. And his solution was in adequate to carry out the task on the one of the example given , then the other task was the opposite and employees working on building collapsing underneath them Going by the information I was told it sounds to me that safety officer does not fully understand his role as safety officer, management don’t fully understand their position and employees are stuck in the middle unsure as well. Other times when there are doing tasks that are totally unsafe but no safety officer etc, so employees carrying out the task because their are afraid to complain, not that their will lose job straight away, but because there will not get further employment and be the first to lose contract etc. The safety officer job is to stop unsafe acts and with the management/workers to come up with safer solution as far as reasonable practicable.
DP  
#62 Posted : 22 March 2012 15:22:15(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
DP

I believe we have a 'something for nothing' culture in general society. I agree you need to split the two EL and PL - in a company with sound management systems and a solid safety culture you can manage the situation and knock any culture in the head. Now for the PL another matter all together - its mentioned earlier in the thread issue in retail its rife - the slightest knock or scrape and the claim is in and in most cases vastly exaggerated. As a safety / insurance team we learn from incidents and put barriers in place to protect - as Jake quite rightly states too - sometimes over whats expected in legislation. Things are changing though - we run more to court these days on the back of some success's - only last week we won one - IP slipped on a grape (that old chestnut) we don’t retail food. However, based on our well managed defense (and systems and process) we won and the judge ruled for the defendant. We repudiate 52% of PL claims - that’s simply because we have had that many spurious ones its hard not to get good at it!
decimomal  
#63 Posted : 22 March 2012 16:24:42(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
decimomal

I am still watching the thread with interest folks, and appreciate the responses. I certainly agree about separating the EL and PL and am looking forward to an interesting afternoon on 12th April. I will be packing my hard hat just in case!! Decimo
decimomal  
#64 Posted : 13 April 2012 11:29:52(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
decimomal

I said I would give some feedback on this. The format was a 'question time' type panel consisting of a personal injury claims lawyer, me representing the insurance sector (Broker), a lady from ACAS and an employer. The audience were a mixture of employers and health and safety practitioners along with an HSE inspector. It was generally accepted that there is certainly a perception that there is a compensation culture in society, but that it is generally confined to public liability issues rather than employer liability. The vast majority of claims appear to be related to traffic incidents and whiplash. The most eye opening comments for me came from the employer (a very pleasant chap as it happens) who did not really do himself any favours by dismissing back to work interviews as a waste of time and whose response to a query about risk assessments implied that they were not of any value and stated that in terms of slips and trips he tells his employees to watch where they are putting their feet! I am not sure what the HSE man made of this. (By coincidence I was reading an article yesterday that states slips trips and falls are going to be the new whiplash). I got a bit of grief as a representative from the insurance sector, but half expected that anyway; the audience were very good though, and were equally abrasive with the claims lawyer (another very nice chap as it happens). Thank you all for your contributions.
RayRapp  
#65 Posted : 13 April 2012 11:39:54(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
RayRapp

Deci, thanks for the feedback. All nice people by all accounts...
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